69 So. 259 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1915
Such evidence might, as said, well sustain a conviction for keeping or having in possession for sale or other unlawful disposition such liquor, but certainly would not sustain a conviction for an actual sale, barter, exchange, delivery, or giving away. Does the fact, there
From 12 Cyc. 280, we quote on the same subject, as follows: “Several rules have been laid down by the authorities for determining whether the crimes are identical. One test is to ascertain whether the facts alleged in the second indictment would, if given in evidence,
This is not the case here, as before seen; and we have no hesitancy, therefore, in holding that the former acquittal of defendant under a charge of selling, exchanging, bartering, giving away, or delivering liquors in violation of a municipal ordinance on the same evidence as was here introduced is not a bar to this prosecution for keeping or having in possession for sale or other unlawful disposition such liquors in contravention of state statutes. See Harrison v. State, 36 Ala. 248; Foster v. State, 39 Ala. 229; Gordon v. State, 71 Ala. 315; Dominick v. State, 40 Ala. 680, 91 Am. Dec. 496; State v. Standifer, 5 Port. 523; Bowen v. State, 106 Ala. 178, 17 South. 335.
Prior to the enactment of section 1222 of the Code, the general rule was that in no case would a prosecution for a violation of a municipal ordinance bar a subsequent prosecution under a state statute, although the latter prosecution be based on the same act as the first, and although .the crime denounced by the ordinance was identically the same as that denounced by the statute.—Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, supra, p. 605; Englehardt v. State, 88 Ala. 100, 7 South. 154; Mobile v. Allaire, 14 Ala. 400.
However this be, it is clear that if a prosecution-, under a statute identical in terms with the ordinance here, would not bar the present prosecution — and it would not, as pointed out — then certainly a prosecution under the mentioned ordinance would not operate as a bar to the present prosecution.
We fail to find that anything which was said or held in the cases of Dowling v. City of Troy, 1 Ala. App. 508, 56 South. 116, and in Cast v. State, 11 Ala. App. 117, 65 South. 718, cited us by appellee, is to the contrary.
The plea of former jeopardy was, omitting the heading and signing, as follows: “Comes the defendant in his own proper person, and for plea says: He ought not to be required to answer this complaint, and that the state ought not to prosecute the same against him, because on, to wit, the 3d day of April, 1914, he was tried and convicted in the mayor’s court of the town of Brundidge for the violation of an ordinance committed within the police jurisdiction of the said town of Brundidge, and from said conviction he appealed to the circuit court of Bike county, and was in said circuit court placed on trial for the violation of the said ordinance, and was then and there acquitted of the said charge, and that the charge for which he was finally acquitted in said circuit court Was a prosecution for the same, or substantially the same, offense as that charged in the complaint in this case, and he makes oath that this plea is true.”
The state joined issue on the plea; and the only evidence introduced by defendant in support of the plea was the affidavit and warrant under which he was formerly tried, together with the municipal ordinance upon which such affidavit and warrant were based, followed
As Ave find no reversible error in the record, it follows that the judgment of conviction must be, and is, affirmed.
Affirmed.